I'm ex Caludon Castle and went there in the sixties. When I was a pupil Tilley was the headmaster, with Cooke his deputy. That was the era of the cane and they loved dishing it out. You got it for minor stuff and when I missed a detention I was told to go to the house master, who was Mr Siddell. He was also my rugby teacher and as he always played me in his team, I thought I'd just get a ticking off for forgetting the detention. How wrong was I as he got out his cane and whacked me on my hands, twice hard on each. It really hurt and my fingertips were bleeding, but was told to just go back to my lesson. On my way out with my bottom lip twitching he calmly said : " Don't forget you've got rugby training later. " Can you imagine that happening today ? But I never went back for more of that as it shook me up, so in a way it worked for me.
But I enjoyed my years there and I was in Talbot and Greene, and as I loved football and rugby and cricket too it was mainly good times. I started in set 2 so I must have been fairly bright, but in my last year was in set 4. All I cared about was sport and because the teams I was in were successful the school didn't care if I wasn't putting much effort in the classroom. Caludon looking back was geared towards sport over education I found, and even my English teacher a Mr Day was our football coach, and he also loved rock music and I recall him playing Cream and Family in lessons. He was a great bloke/teacher and he was more like an uncle than a teacher. But Vic Webb an ex army major our maths teacher was a hard bastard, and used to punch pupils, or throw board rubbers at you ! But he too doubled up as the rugger coach, and if you got stuck in on the pitch he liked you.
So yes discipline was there and if you messed about you'd get punished, but if you were sporty they left you alone. So all in all Cally was alright.